155 Mass. 10 | Mass. | 1891
The ruling of the court, that the plaintiff was not illegally taking scallops if he was taking them for his family use, was correct. The Pub. Sts. c. 91, § 68, authorize municipal officers to grant permits for the taking of “ eels, clams, quahaugs,
The defendant asked the court to rule that the pendency undetermined of the libel was a bar to the maintenance by the plaintiff of his action on the first and second counts set out in his declaration; and we are of opinion that the judge should have so ruled. The defendant was a constable of the town of Fairhaven, designated by the selectmen of the town, under the St. of 1885, c. 220, § 6, to detect and prosecute any violations within said town of the laws of the State relating to shell-fish-cries. This statute provides that “ each of said constables so designated may without a warrant arrest any person found violating any of said laws, and detain him for prosecution not exceeding twenty-four hours, and may seize any boat or vessel used in such violation, together with her tackle, apparel, and furniture, with all implements belonging thereto, which shall be forfeited to the use of the town or city in which such seizure is made.” The Pub. Sts. c. 194, provide for proceedings to be taken in any case where goods are forfeited for an offence, and
We are of opinion that this chapter, in all cases where proceedings for forfeiture are properly taken under it, provides the only mode of determining the rights of owners or claimants of the property seized, and that the person who makes the seizure is not liable to an action at common law, provided he complies with all the provisions of this statute. He is at no time a tortfeasor, but as soon as the property comes into his hands by seizure, and at all times thereafter, it is in the custody of the law.
The rights of the owner are fully protected by the provisions of this chapter. He can obtain immediate possession of his property by giving a bond to comply with the order of the court in regard to it; or he may, if he prefers, wait for the final adjudication, when, if the court decides in his favor, there will be a decree for restitution of the property, and a proper process will be issued to carry the decree into effect. If the seizure was groundless and without probable cause, judgment will be rendered in his favor for his damages. The statute is broad enough to allow the court to make any order which is necessary to protect his rights. But if there was probable cause for the seizure, no damages can be assessed if the seizor has in all respects performed his duty in regard to the property.
Decrees rendered under similar statutes and in analogous cases have been held to be conclusive, and exclusive of jurisdiction in other proceedings as to the matters adjudicated. Gelston v. Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 246, 328, and 13 Johns. 561. Sailley v. Smith, 11 Johns. 500. Fire Department of New York v. Kip, 10 Wend. 266. Stoughton v. Mott, 13 Vt. 175, 15 Vt. 162, and 25 Vt. 668. The Mars, 1 Gallison, 192. United States v. Bags of Coffee, 8 Cranch, 398. Murray v. The Charming Betsy, 2 Cranch, 64. The Liverpool Packet, 1 Gallison, 513. The Apollon, 9 Wheat. 362. The Palmyra, 12 Wheat. 1, and 10 Wheat. 502. See also Barnacoat v. Gunpowder, 1 Met. 225; Whitney v. Walsh, 1 Cush. 29; Commonwealth v. Intoxicating Liquors, 14 Gray, 375 ; Robert v. Witherhead, 12 Mod. 92; Wilkins v. Despard, 5 T. R. 112; Warne v. Farley, 6 T. R. 443.
Under a statute of the United States (U. S. Rev. Sts. §§ 975, 976,) it is provided that, when any prosecution shall be commenced on account of a seizure under any act of Congress, and judgment shall be given for the claimants, if it appears to the
In this respect our statute differs from these by giving the owner or other person entitled to tlje property his remedy in such a case in the original suit, instead of permitting an action at the common law. But by the decisions in England, and under the statute of the United States, a suit at common law cannot be brought until the termination of the proceedings under the libel, if the seizor, after his seizure, followed the course pointed out by the statute. It would be unjust to subject an officer who has been acting in good faith in an effort to execute the law to a second action to determine his liability while the proceedings under the libel are pending. In ordinary cases it is enough that he is liable to the claimant for all damages in the original suit, and in any conceivable case it would be enough that he should be subject to an action at law after, and not before, the termination of the suit to obtain a forfeiture, if he should fail to comply with the requirements of the statute and restore the property after a decree for restitution, and so should lose the right to plead the statute in justification.
For the decision of this case it is not necessary to go further than to hold that the pendency of the first suit is a bar to the maintenance of the second suit on the first and second counts of the declaration. Whether, if there had been a termination of the first suit by a decree for restitution of the property, and an award of consequential damages for the taking, followed by a failure on the part of the defendant to return the property in obedience to the decree, the plaintiff’s remedy for the defendant’s default might be through a suit at common law for the seizure, or in some other proceeding, we need not decide.
Exceptions sustained.